@Nooble Impressive. I wouldn't have guessed this, actually (we've had some other cool youngsters here in the past. It's nice to see young people knowing what they want)
It looks like you want to use using error_condition instead of error_code here.
Class error_condition
The class error_condition describes an object used to hold values identifying error conditions. [ Note: error_condition values are portable abstractions, while error_code values are impl...
@Rapptz The general idea is that error_code would let me (for example) directly encode Windows error codes. It more or less reserves a few (few compared to the number of Windows error codes, anyway) for the POSIX codes (which are also used as the portable values for error conditions).
@Rapptz semantically they're not, though. The point is you have to squint a little :) The standard library doesn't really supply enough features to make this distinction worthwhile, but the abstraction is there in case other libraries would put it to good use (?)
@Rapptz I think the category need not be the same. But I'm just conjecturing
Most of the teachers use a tool made by one of the teachers that keeps anything after a "." (file extension) but renames the beginning to LASTNAME-FIRSTNAME. Made file extension really long c:
@MartinJames Consider the theory that they both got teleported into a new dimension, never to come back until they discover the meaning of life. You can't prove this false until one of them says otherwise.
For those wondering, it seems that you're supposed to take std::error_code as a parameter and then compare it to an std::error_condition for cross-platform-ness.
Or rather, you should expect to receiveerror_codes from functions (by passing out parameters) and convert implicitly. The whole machinery in the back is just to make it (a) cheap (b) extensible
@MartinJames Also consider the fact that if they did, in fact, get teleported into a new dimension where they have the ability to acquire the meaning of life, that they are in a world infinitely better than that of our own. What are the chances they would ever want to go back?
> The LWG was aware of the need for localisation, but there was no design before the group that satisfactorily reconciled localisation with user-extensibility. Rather than engage in some design-by-committee, the LWG opted to say nothing in the standard about localisation of the error messages.
@Voldemort It's not really very funny. It's basically just that in C++ you have to write a copy constructor for (nearly) any class that uses an owning pointer.
Compared to languages (implementations) that use garbage collection you do end up copying quite a few more objects (where one with GC just creates another pointer to the same object).
@Nooble Not just that HTML isn't a programming language, but that web devs have no clue what programming is, how it's done, or what a programming language would look like.
Yes, but there's nothing much else. I've been playing since beta weekends and for the past few months I've been feeling bored with the permanent ingame content.
I don’t have a plan, I don’t think I have a single exotic torch on my characters. I only use a torch on ranger to stack might at the start, or maybe sneak here and there with my mesmer. Not much of an incentive.
(Haven’t done WvW in a while, and not really hooked on PvP.)
@Nooble Depends. For those that are supported by the base (like those of Asus') then it depends on the hinge. I've tried one of those and it's quite sturdy.
In computer programming, scope is an enclosing context where values and expressions are associated. The scope resolution operator helps to identify and specify the context to which an identifier refers, particularly by specifying a namespace. The specific uses vary across different programming languages with the notions of scoping. In many languages the scope resolution operator is written "::".
In some languages, notably those influenced by Modula-3, including Python and Go, modules are objects, and scope resolution within modules is a special case of usual object member access, so the usual method...
> If your son has requested a new "processor" from a company called "AMD", this is genuine cause for alarm. AMD is a third-world based company who make inferior, "knock-off" copies of American processor chips
> Your son may try to install "lunix" on your hard drive. If he is careful, you may not notice its presence, however, lunix is a capricious beast, and if handled incorrectly, your son may damage your computer, and even break it completely by deleting Windows, at which point you will have to have your computer repaired by a professional.
@EtiennedeMartel From what I recall, there was quite a bit of debate at the time whether it was serious or not. Consensus seemed to be that it was some guy who'd watched Reefer Madness once too often, or something on that order.
hi all, I hope it's okay to ask this here (irc is blocked here): I have this open source project where I'll need a Server to Clients. Server will just serve json data to stand-alone java desktop clients. However I won't have the $ to run the server that will serve millions of clients. So I was wondering if P2P would help me here. Any advice? Bitorrent?
thanks for the suggestions. how hard it is to work with P2P? i hope there is out of the box solution? -- since I just need to distribute a sequence JSON files e.g. 2015-01-01_01.js, 2015-01-01_02.js, etc.
@Nooble Before the eternal September, it was really nice--but it wasn't structured to deal well with a constant, large influx of newbies. From a technical viewpoint, the transport was almost infinitely scalable, but from a social viewpoint, it was much more restricted.
@StackedCrooked I suppose I wrote at least a few of those too. Unfortunately Google has broken the Group search so badly that I can hardly find any of my posts any more though.
Googling on the web, I stumbled across a paper from a few years ago that I wasn't aware had cited me: citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/…